ENGL 4701 - ScholarWorks@UNO

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University of New Orleans Syllabi
Fall 2015
ENGL 4701
Dan Doll
University of New Orleans
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Doll, Dan, "ENGL 4701" (2015). University of New Orleans Syllabi. Paper 468.
http://scholarworks.uno.edu/syllabi/468
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ENGL 4701
Dan Doll
LA 271
Office Hrs. 9:00-10:00; 3:00-4:00 MWF
Home ph. 833-4109
Office ph. 280-6362
[email protected]
TEXT: DeMaria British Literature 1640-1789 3rd ed. ISBN 1405119283
8 /19 Introduction
21 Introduction; Pepys: Diary July 1665
24 Philips: Friendship’s Mystery
26 Dryden: MacFlecknoe
28 Dryden: Ode to Killegrew; Killegrew: On Death (HO)
31 Behn: Oroonoko
9/2
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4 Wilmot/Rochester: Satyr Upon Mankind
7 NO CLASS (Labor Day)
9 Wilmot/Rochester: Disabled Debauchee; Imperfect Enjoyment
11 Manley: New Atalantis
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; Astell: A Serious Proposal to the Ladies
16 Mandeville: The Grumbling Hive (HO)
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21 Finch: Nocturnal Reverie (HO)
23 Finch: The Introduction; Adam Pos’d
25 Finch: Unequal Fetters ; Egerton: The Emulation
28 Prior: The Chameleon; Jinny the Just
30 Steele: #11 Inkle & Yarico
10/2 Addison: Visions of Mirzah (HO)
5 Gay: Trivia; Exam prep
7 Gay:Trivia
9 MIDTERM EXAM
12 Congreve: Way of the World
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16 NO CLASS (Fall Break)
Paper 1 Due
19 Swift: Cassinus & Peter (HO); Beautiful Young Nymph
21 Swift: Lady’s Dressing Room
23 Swift: A Modest Proposal
26 Defoe: Shortest Way With Dissenters
28 Defoe: Essay Upon Projects: Academy for Women
30 Carter: Ode to Melancholy; Jones: Soliloquy, On an Empty Purse
11/2 Barber: The Conclusion of a Letter; Moore: Fables for the Female Sex (HO)
4 Young: Love of Fame (HO)
6 Jane Collier: Essay on the Art of Ingeniously Tormenting
9 Duck: Thresher’s Labour; M. Collier: Answer to Duck
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13 Thomson: Winter
16 Haywood: Fantomina
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20 Pope: Of the Characters of Women
23 Pope: Rape of the Lock
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27 No Class (Thanksgiving)
30 Leapor: Epistle to a Lady; Strephon to Celia (HO)
12/2 Montagu: The Lover
4 Last Things
Paper 2 Due
9 FINAL EXAM 12:30-2:30
2 exams 2x20%
2 papers 2x25%
Attendance & Participation 10%
STUDENT LEARNING OUTCOMES
After successfully completing this course students will be able to:
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Identify the ways in which the world of 18th century England is both similar to
and different from ours
Recognize irony as employed for the purposes of satire and explain the rhetorical
strategies of that satire
Place individual texts within the larger movements and genres of the period
ATTENDANCE
Attendance is required. Because the course is almost exclusively discussion, class
members play a vital role in generating the ideas and analyses of the course. You cannot
make up for missing this discussion merely by reading the texts or another student’s
notes. You have to be here to make our explorations of these texts succeed; you owe it to
yourself and to the rest of us. Participation and attendance will determine your final grade
if your exams and papers leave you on the borderline.
ACADEMIC INTEGRITY
Academic integrity is fundamental to the process of learning and to the evaluating of
academic performance. Academic dishonesty (cheating on tests, claiming the work of
others as your own) will not be tolerated. Refer to the UNO Judicial Code for further
definitions of academic dishonesty and the penalties for dishonesty.
ACCOMMODATIONS FOR STUDENTS WITH DISABILITIES
Students who qualify for services will receive the academic modifications for which they
are legally entitled. It is the responsibility of the student to register with the Office of
Disability Services (UC 260) each semester and follow their procedures for obtaining
assistance.